Agreed on all accounts, but vonbach accused the US of not facing their equal since 1812 and that just isn't true. While the industrial might of the US may have made the outcome of the war inevitable, Germany and Japan were still far from being pushovers. They could face us on the battlefield and have a reasonable chance of victory. To me, that makes them our military equal.
He also accused the US of winning wars by targeting and killing civilians, which is also not true. While I can admit that we have committed our share of war crimes, we have always achieved our victories on the battlefield, not by slaughtering innocents.
To me, the idea of fighting a military equal means that either side of a war has a reasonable chance to win. Not fifty-fifty, certainly. But I can demonstrate from the First World War and the Second World War. In the First World War, the Central Powers, especially Germany, came damned close to defeating the British and the French in 1917, and again in 1918, and
did defeat the Russians in 1917-8. Assuming the Americans joined the war before this happened, what options would America have to win the war by itself against Germany? (Well, they'd have Japan on their side, I guess. Like that would do much good.) The German armies are more powerful, and the German fleet is at least of equal strength; the Germans would be able to prevent the Americans from doing anything in Europe (especially since the Americans would somehow have to pull off an amphibious landing in the face of serious opposition with a largely unblooded army and without the ability to use the United Kingdom as a base), and the American public of the 1910s, unlike that of the 1940s, would be difficult to keep in the war for very long against that. But look at the Second World War. The United States' population was significantly more interventionist, and attacks on American soil and long-term attacks on American shipping inured the populace to a greater willingness for war. Unlike 1918, the United States absolutely had the industrial and military ability to fight both Germany and Japan at the same time and win. And to cap it all, the Americans would eventually possess a monopoly on atomic weapons to deploy against enemy targets. You can make an argument that the Germans, Austro-Hungarians, Ottomans and the rest could have reasonably won the First World War; it is much harder to make an argument that the Axis and associated powers could have won the Second. That, in my mind, separates a military equal from the rest of the pack. Surely you would agree that that is a reasonable definition, even if you do not share it.
That doesn't mean that the ability to win a war defines all of what a military equal is. Sometimes political or other factors prevent one country from employing the full measure of its military might against an enemy that possesses a military that can in no way be said to be an "equal". The PAVN got smashed by the US military in every major engagement they fought with each other, and clearly cannot be described as the "equal" of the US Army, but due to the way in which the war in Indochina was defined in the 1960s and 1970s, the Americans lost the war anyway. So there's sort of a minimum threshold of military power, I guess?
Having said all that, not fighting a military equal doesn't mean much. In some cases - especially America's - it means that American diplomacy has prevented such a situation from arising (good for us!) or that the American military is so awesome that no such equal exists (good for us!). I don't see how either of those things is bad.
The assertion that Americans win wars by committing war crimes is
prima facie ridiculous. Even if Americans were more prone to commit war crimes than any other military in history (hahahahahahano), the thing about war crimes is that they usually
don't materially assist to victory in war. Even if they do have a benefit, it's usually incidental and not necessary (did the US Army
really need to disperse plague-ridden clothes and blankets to various Native American tribes in the 1870s? would it
really have lost the Plains Wars if it hadn't?), or actively, materially harmful (such as the practice of taking trophies from the bodies of Japanese soldiers, which if anything only strengthened Japanese morale). So yeah, he was wrong about that, but that's obvious and I didn't feel the need to address it.
I disagree that taking Midway would have been beneficial; taking and holding that base would have likely been a strategic liability rather than an asset. It is close enough to Pearl Harbor for Americans to attack while distant enough from Japan to make it difficult to resupply (US submarines based in Alaska and Hawaii would have had an even easier time attacking Japanese supply lines). I can't imagine their long-term struggle with attrition would be ameliorated by this.
The Japanese failed to realize there were two types of targets in the Pacific: those worth attacking with all 6 fleet carriers, and those that were not worth attacking at all. The unfocused attacks they launched in 1942 at bases with marginal value simply enabled the Americans to defeat them in detail.
I guess the greater problem was that they ran out of good targets besides Hawaii, which they could not seriously contest unless the most generous hypothetical conditions are entertained.
I never said that
taking Midway Island would be worthwhile; I said
winning the Battle of Midway would be. Regardless of what you think about the Japanese chances, three less carriers on the Americans' side is a win for Japan. I believe - I may be wrong - that the Japanese idea about an amphibious landing on Midway was simply a device for setting the trap for the American fleet, and when they found themselves in an engagement that landing became an irrelevant means to an end that had already been achieved. I don't see the Japanese maintaining a position on Midway for very long even if they had decided to stick the landing anyway.
I completely agree that Japan's inability to stick to its original offensive-defensive strategy in favor of widely separated attacks against dubious targets with virtually no resources was an error that doomed what minuscule chance the Japanese had of "winning" the war in the Pacific, whatever that might have meant.
I will get to back with you about your many, MANY, factual errors in the rest of your post later.
However, for now I will point out that there was only 1 Essex class carrier commissioned in 1942 and three in 1943 so your claim that six new carriers would be available within a year of Midway is entirely incorrect.
In 1942, CV-9 was commissioned. During the course of 1943, CV-10, -11, -12, -16, -17, and -18 were commissioned. All of these were
Essex-class vessels. USS
Wasp (CV-18), however, was not commissioned until November 1943, more than twelve months after Midway. Six plus one minus one equals six.
Patroklos said:
Assuming the Japenese curb stomped the US at Midway, and there is no good reason to deny this was not a possible outcome, that would leave the US with one operational fleet carrier that in real life was sunk just a few months later (USS Hornet).
This would have given the Japanese complete mastery of the Pacific for a least the rest of 1942 and superiority through 1943. More importantly the cream of the crop of Japanese naval aviation would not have been lost. Rather, the US would have suffered that loss of experienced pilots. The Japanese would ales launch three more carriers in 1942 and 1943, offsetting the new Essexs of those years which would not have been empty shells like they were in real life. That assumes the Japenese do not have follow on victories just like the US did after Midway.
You are being a bit to arrogant in your assessments.
The good reason to deny that the Japanese could have "curbstomped" the Americans at Midway is that they went into the battle with a crap plan (actually, scratch that: a
horrible plan) and crap intelligence, while the Americans went into it with excellent intelligence and a decent plan; poor Japanese naval aviation doctrine compounded further advantages that the Americans gained partially through luck. Maybe the Japanese could've won the battle; most battles could, at least theoretically, have gone the other way by their very nature. But they'd have to have gotten ridiculously, unsustainably lucky, and the Americans would've had to get either ridiculously, unsustainably unlucky, or abominably stupid on an institutional level very quickly. Neither one of those things seems particularly
likely to me.
But ignore that, and say that the Japanese wipe out all three American carriers at Midway. Okay, they still can't take Hawaii, they still can't take Port Moresby, they still can't push up the Kokoda Trail, and their impending efforts towards Guadalcanal are still badly exposed. The Japanese are still effectively incapable of hurting the Americans in any meaningful way; they must continue to attack the Australians - something that victory at Midway does not improve their ability to do. So they can't stop the Americans from reclaiming naval superiority in terms of sheer numbers before next year. Furthermore, Japanese operational naval doctrine is still badly flawed and relies on luring the remainder of the American fleet into an engagement in WestPac that the Americans would have to be ludicrously stupid to enter. They still have no counter to American submarines. Their material capability to win the war is no greater than it was before Midway.
I really don't see how any of this is "arrogance" at all.